Im trying to modify the h3, body and cart detail's font color on my check-out page, I had it right before but this line seems to be overriding my previous style. This is what im trying to achieve
https://intiwallets.com/checkout/
.et_pb_bg_layout_dark, .et_pb_bg_layout_dark h1, .et_pb_bg_layout_dark h2, .et_pb_bg_layout_dark h3, .et_pb_bg_layout_dark h4, .et_pb_bg_layout_dark h5, .et_pb_bg_layout_dark h6 {
color:#FFF !important;
}
If I un-check that my regular styles show up correctly. Print
I tried these lines to fix it but it did not solve the issue as the order details are still showing up in white, same as the credit card gateway label. Print
div.woocommerce h3 {
color:#222222!important;
}
div.woocommerce p {
color:#404040
}
li.wc_payment_method.payment_method_wocommerce_yape_peru, li.wc_payment_method.payment_method_bank_transfer_1,
li.wc_payment_method.payment_method_bank_transfer_2,
li.wc_payment_method.payment_method_bank_transfer_3 {
color: #404040!important;
}
Also tried this, but it overrode all my other pages settings.
.et_pb_bg_layout_dark
{
color: #404040!important
}
Thank you in advance, any feedback would be highly appreciated.
This fixed the issue.
div.woocommerce-checkout-review-order {
color: #404040!important
}
div.woocommerce h3 {
color:#222222!important;
}
div.woocommerce p {
color:#404040
}
In bootstrap there is this mixin that creates various background color classes.
I modified it to also change the text color automatically. Since this change is only applied to the same element that has the class, I added that huge selector that selects all headings and paragraphs within the parent class to fix the color.
#mixin bg-variant($parent, $color) {
#{$parent} {
background: $color !important;
color: color-yiq($color);
p, h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6, .h1, .h2, .h3, .h4, .h5, .h6, .display-1, .display-2, .display-3 {
&:not(.input-group-text) {
color: color-yiq($color);
}
}
}
}
There is a second mixin, but for gradients, called bg-gradient-variant.
But there is a problem when I have the following code structure:
<div class="bg-gradient-success">
<div class="bg-secondary">
<p>Some text</p>
</div>
</div>
The paragraph gets the color of bg-gradient-success, instead of bg-secondary, because the gradient mixin is defined after the normal mixin. Changing this order fixes this case but breaks others. Is there a way to automatically increase specificity in the inner class (not a hacky one use way) to make the color appropriate to the most inner class?
I have checked and checked and I'm sure it's something simple I've overlooked but my font is not displaying.
The first paragraph is suppose to have quotes around it (you will see it has them right now because I did it without font-awesome); however, you will see the second full paragraph is suppose to have a quote at the beginning and it's not displaying. Please help
http://dev.healthcaresolutionsteam.com/agent/barbara-scott/
Your CSS specificity is being overridden by a style in style.css.
Font-Awesome only has:
.fa { font-family: FontAwesome }
Yet your style overrides the font-family (note the !important):
#fake, .menu, a.signin span, .balloon_text, #footer, #footer a, #signin_menu p a, #learning_center h2, #hst_blog h2, #carriers h2, #career_center h2, #learning_center, #hst_blog, #carrier_careers, .entry-title, #sidebar, #sidebar a, .breadcrumbs a, .breadcrumbs, #searchform input, .page-title, .entry-content, .entry-content a, .entry-utility, .read_more, #content h1, #content h2, #content h3, #content h4, #content h5, #content h6, .widget-title, #live_chat a, #hst_careers, #apply_online, #sales_revenue, #hst_compensation, #search_agents, #search_map, .agent_search, #search-results, #usca-intro-text, .usca-plan, #usca-form {
font-family: 'AllerRegular',Arial,Helvetica,sans-serif !important;
font-weight: normal;
}
Desired style being overridden:
Style actually being applied:
Check, if you use selector *
*{font-family: Arial}
in your default stylesheet.
I have this code :
h1, h2, h3, h4{
color: red;
}
.message_rouge h1, h2, h3, h4,{color: black;}
Why are ALL my headers black instead of just the ones inside "message_rouge" and the rest red?
Thanks :)
Each line is it's own selector, but you're only specifying .message_rouge on the first one.
Use this instead:
.message_rouge h1,
.mesage_rouge h2,
.mesage_rouge h3,
.mesage_rouge h4 {
color: black;
}
This is wrong
.message_rouge h1, h2, h3, h4,{color: black;}
This is right
.message_rouge h1,.message_rouge h2,.message_rouge h3,.message_rouge h4,{color: black;}
I'd like to target all h tags on a page. I know you can do it this way...
h1,
h2,
h3,
h4,
h5,
h6 {
font: 32px/42px trajan-pro-1,trajan-pro-2;
}
but is there a more efficient way of doing this using advanced CSS selectors? e.g something like:
[att^=h] {
font: 32px/42px trajan-pro-1,trajan-pro-2;
}
(but obviously this doesn't work)
No, a comma-separated list is what you want in this case.
If you're using SASS you could also use this mixin:
#mixin headings {
h1, h2, h3,
h4, h5, h6 {
#content;
}
}
Use it like so:
#include headings {
font: 32px/42px trajan-pro-1, trajan-pro-2;
}
Edit: My personal favourite way of doing this by optionally extending a placeholder selector on each of the heading elements.
h1, h2, h3,
h4, h5, h6 {
#extend %headings !optional;
}
Then I can target all headings like I would target any single class, for example:
.element > %headings {
color: red;
}
It's not basic css, but if you're using LESS (http://lesscss.org), you can do this using recursion:
.hClass (#index) when (#index > 0) {
h#{index} {
font: 32px/42px trajan-pro-1,trajan-pro-2;
}
.hClass(#index - 1);
}
.hClass(6);
Sass (http://sass-lang.com) will allow you to manage this, but won't allow recursion; they have #for syntax for these instances:
#for $index from 1 through 6 {
h#{$index}{
font: 32px/42px trajan-pro-1,trajan-pro-2;
}
}
If you're not using a dynamic language that compiles to CSS like LESS or Sass, you should definitely check out one of these options. They can really simplify and make more dynamic your CSS development.
The new :is() CSS pseudo-class can do it in one selector.
For example, here's how you could target all headings inside a container element:
.container :is(h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6)
{
color: red;
}
Most browsers now support :is(), but keep in mind that most browsers made before 2020 didn't support it without a prefix, so be careful about using this if you need to support older browsers.
In some cases, you may instead want to use the :where() pseudo-class, which is very similar to :is() but has different specificity rules.
SCSS+Compass makes this a snap, since we're talking about pre-processors.
#{headings(1,5)} {
//definitions
}
You can learn about all the Compass helper selectors here:
Here is my attempt to solve this problem with (modern) CSS only.
Context : Inside of Joplin (very nice note taking app, link), there is an userfile.css in which you can write your custom CSS for display and export of markdown notes.
I wanted to target all headings directly after (adjacent sibling) certain tags, namely p, ul, ol and nav to add a margin in between. Thus :
p + h1,
p + h2,
p + h3,
p + h4,
p + h5,
p + h6,
ul + h1,
ul + h2,
ul + h3,
ul + h4,
ul + h5,
ul + h6,
ol + h1,
ol + h2,
ol + h3,
ol + h4,
ol + h5,
ol + h6,
nav + h1,
nav + h2,
nav + h3,
nav + h4,
nav + h5,
nav + h6 {
margin-top: 2em;
}
WOW. Very long. Such selectors.
I then came here, learnt, and tried :
p + :is(h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6),
ul + :is(h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6),
ol + :is(h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6),
nav + :is(h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6) {
margin-top: 2em;
}
Hmm. Much shorter. Nice.
And then, it struck me :
:is(p, ul, ol, nav) + :is(h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6) {
margin-top: 2em;
}
Yay, this also works! How amazoomble!
This might also work with :where() or other CSS combinators like ~ or even (space) to create "matrix" of CSS selectors instead of very long lists.
Credits : all the answers on this page referencing the :is() selector.
Stylus's selector interpolation
for n in 1..6
h{n}
font: 32px/42px trajan-pro-1,trajan-pro-2;
The jQuery selector for all h tags (h1, h2 etc) is " :header ". For example, if you wanted to make all h tags red in color with jQuery, use:
$(':header').css("color","red")
July 2022 update
The future came and the :is selector is what you're looking for as described in this answer given in 2020 by #silverwind (now the selected answer).
Original answer
To tackle this with vanilla CSS look for patterns in the ancestors of the h1..h6 elements:
<section class="row">
<header>
<h1>AMD RX Series</h1>
<small>These come in different brands and types</small>
</header>
</header>
<div class="row">
<h3>Sapphire RX460 OC 2/4GB</h3>
<small>Available in 2GB and 4GB models</small>
</div>
If you can spot patterns you may be able to write a selector which targets what you want. Given the above example all h1..h6 elements may be targeted by combining the :first-child and :not pseudo-classes from CSS3, available in all modern browsers, like so:
.row :first-child:not(header) { /* ... */ }
In the future advanced pseudo-class selectors like :has(), and subsequent-sibling combinators (~), will provide even more control as Web standards continue to evolve over time.
Plain CSS
With plain css you have two ways. This targets all the heading elements wherever they are inside the page (as asked).
:is(h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6) {}
This one does the same but keeps the specificity to 0.
:where(h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6) {}
With PostCSS
You can also use PostCSS and the custom selectors plugin
#custom-selector :--headings h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6;
:--headings {
margin-top: 0;
}
Output:
h1,
h2,
h3,
h4,
h5,
h6 {
margin-top: 0;
}
You could .class all the headings in Your document if You would like to target them with a single selector, as follows,
<h1 class="heading">...heading text...</h1>
<h2 class="heading">...heading text...</h2>
and in the css
.heading{
color: #Dad;
background-color: #DadDad;
}
I am not saying this is always best practice, but it can be useful, and for targeting syntax, easier in many ways,
so if You give all h1 through h6 the same .heading class in the html, then You can modify them for any html docs that utilize that css sheet.
upside, more global control versus "section div article h1, etc{}",
downside, instead of calling all the selectors in on place in the css, You will have much more typing in the html, yet I find that having a class in the html to target all headings can be beneficial, just be careful of precedence in the css, because conflicts could arise from
Using scss you can loop through 6 and append to an empty variable $headings using a comma separator
$headings: ();
#for $index from 1 through 6 {
$headings: list.append($headings, h#{$index}, $separator: comma);
}
#{$headings} {
--default: var(--dark);
color: var(--default);
}
Thanks #steve